Shouldn't the pot raise be 40? Its 12 in front + the total on the table including your bet which is 12+12+3+1+28 and add 28 +12 = 40? Correct me if I am wrong
It's confusing and seemed incorrect when seat 10 betted pot he said 3x12 + 6 = 42 where did he get the 6??? I think he made an error it should be 3 x12 + 4 = 40, since the rule for calculating a pot bet is 3 x last bet + all money already in pot. Anyone got a different answer?
I was taught that the small blind would stay at $1, not $3 in the event that the first better during pre flop round wanted to make a pot sized bet.. Thus the max bet should be $10, not $12
erika schwarz in cash game, small blind is counted as complete, in tournament it's not. So it would be 12 in a 1/3 cash game and 10 if the blinds happened to be 1 and 3 in a tournament
at 1/2 plo it is 7 so they are not completing the sb there? it be 3x bb + a sb same for 5/10 u can make it 35 3x bb +sb 2/5 u can make it 17.5 3x bb +sb.. at least thats how they do it online and at my local casino.
At our casino, 1-3 plo makes a call of $5. So basically the small and big are 5 each. We always count and multiply increments of 5 for simplicity’s sake. In this videos example the first to act would be $20 on a pot bet. If The next player repots it would be 70. (3*20) + small and big blind which we count as 5 and 5 instead of 1&3.
At my casino2/2/5 we count the sb+bb as one blind, so opening raise limit would be $15 (2+2+5 *round up*+5) or (3*bb+sb+minimum call($5) rounded to nearest 5=$15)
Idk if y’all do it differently in other states but in Texas this is not how you calc pot sizing. That’s what I believe and just my opinion correct if I’m wrong
david kramer My audition is tomorrow, too, this helped me a ton. We're expected to know PLO and PLO8 going in, and I don't have experience with either one.
David, in dealer school, I was instructed that a folded small blind is counted as complete in later betting rounds. In the casino I work at, the preflop pot would be rounded to 310. The rounding rule is in place and agreed upon by the players.
The pot to 12 makes sense to me, however I do not understand why the repot is to 42 instead of 30. I know 42 is correct, but I don't understand why. He calls 12 and raises his call 24 + the two blinds. Where does the extra 12 come from?
Peter Sorensen Small blind pre-fold or call is counted as a big blind in cash games. so: Seat 1 is in for 3 Seat 2 also 3 Seat 3, potted 3x the last bet. + everything Else on the table including the pot.. so 3x3 = 9, plus the small blind which we count as 3.. 12. then seat 4 potted again, so you've got 12 as the last bet. 3x12 is 36 plus 3 for the big blind and 3 for the small blind, giving us 42. each time someone does a pot bet, we multiply the last bet by 3 and add whatever else is on the table. not including the bet we're multiplying. because we already added that. so a pot bet from 42, is 42x3 giving us 126, then plus 12 for the last pot bet, and the big and small blinds. leaving us with the new bet of 144. but then once all the bets are called, if the small blind didn't call the bet. he's still only in for 1, which is where Dealer Dave loses me with his workings. :) as we would be adding 2 to the pot which isnt' going into the pot..
+Chris Barnard In the dealer school I attended and the casino I work at the small blind is considered complete when pulling the money in pre-flop. Even if the small blind is folded. Thus the pre-flop pot is 144 + 144 + 12 + 3 + 3 = 306, thus the pot would be 310, because we round too.
The blinds get counted as minimum bet. = 3... seat 7 pot is - 3x3 +3 = 12 then seat 10 = 12x3 +3+3 = 42... then seat 4 pot raise is = 42 x 3 + 12 +3 +3 = 144
Totally wrong from the flop...3 times the previous bet plus the trail...so if seat 7 wanted to pot it would be 3x3 which is 9 plus 1 from seat 5, 10 total not 12